I was just wondering how the process is on making skateboarding parts (trucks, boards, wheels etc). I've seen some on decks online in the past so I decided to search how trucks and wheels were made and found these videos

I always thought it would be so sick to skate a board you made from scratch, shame you need crazy industrial presses and stuff to do it, i wonder if theres a way you could make a good quality board in just a basic workshop.

I always thought it would be so sick to skate a board you made from scratch, shame you need crazy industrial presses and stuff to do it, i wonder if theres a way you could make a good quality board in just a basic workshop.

I always thought it would be so sick to skate a board you made from scratch, shame you need crazy industrial presses and stuff to do it, i wonder if theres a way you could make a good quality board in just a basic workshop.

just make a mould and youre good to go

Some of the pressure transducers needed to press those things stiff enough so that they have a good rigidity are really expensive and require a lot of other parts to operate correctly. Unless you have crazy strong clamps. But other than that you could totally make one in a basic workshop.

and on a side note, Rodney Mullen is the Steven Hawking of skateboarding.

bought some of the bones STF wheels today thank yall for the recommendation they're fucking good!

powerslide's will never be the same. and you might also forget flatspots ever existed.. i think they got a guarantee on em where you just snap a photo and e-mail it to them and they will send you a new set of wheels. i know i had the bones hardcore bushings and they got fucked up (the part where the white meets the harder yellow urethane) and i e-mailed em and they sent me a new pair. also a few other SLAP PALS have had good feedback on their reimbursement for defective products.

bought some of the bones STF wheels today thank yall for the recommendation they're fucking good!

powerslide's will never be the same. and you might also forget flatspots ever existed.. i think they got a guarantee on em where you just snap a photo and e-mail it to them and they will send you a new set of wheels. i know i had the bones hardcore bushings and they got fucked up (the part where the white meets the harder yellow urethane) and i e-mailed em and they sent me a new pair. also a few other SLAP PALS have had good feedback on their reimbursement for defective products.

hell yeah man i was just riding some blank joints i got for cheap at the shop and even tho they were alot bigger (in diameter & width) than my new bones the bones still rode through rough terrain even better. only gotta couple hours with em but im backin em, they just roll soooo good. i thought there might be a small adjustment period due going from wide 54mm wheels to super skinny 52's but after my first few pushes i was 100% used to em.

bought some of the bones STF wheels today thank yall for the recommendation they're fucking good!

powerslide's will never be the same. and you might also forget flatspots ever existed.. i think they got a guarantee on em where you just snap a photo and e-mail it to them and they will send you a new set of wheels. i know i had the bones hardcore bushings and they got fucked up (the part where the white meets the harder yellow urethane) and i e-mailed em and they sent me a new pair. also a few other SLAP PALS have had good feedback on their reimbursement for defective products.

hell yeah man i was just riding some blank joints i got for cheap at the shop and even tho they were alot bigger (in diameter & width) than my new bones the bones still rode through rough terrain even better. only gotta couple hours with em but im backin em, they just roll soooo good. i thought there might be a small adjustment period due going from wide 54mm wheels to super skinny 52's but after my first few pushes i was 100% used to em.

the last STF's i had were 52mm and I rode em til they got to 50mm.. I was then given 3 sets of spitfires for free which is why i haven't had bones stf again. although the spits are really really good. but bones are truly there moneys worth.

best wheels and bushings out there for sure, i'm skating a set of Spitfires now after having a few sets of Bones that were perfect and i'm bummed, flatspotted super quickly and it only gets worse with time, i didnt even skate them that hard because of a sprained ankle. Also, Bones fully stand behind their product.my roomate had a set of bushings that got fucked up, he took a picture and emailed it to them, 4 days later he got a new set in the mailbox. considering that i live on the other side of the world from them and that it arrived so quickly after only sending them a picture and not the actual defected set, their costumer service is one of the best i've ever seen. especially in the skateboard industry.

I always thought it would be so sick to skate a board you made from scratch, shame you need crazy industrial presses and stuff to do it, i wonder if theres a way you could make a good quality board in just a basic workshop.

just make a mould and youre good to go

Some of the pressure transducers needed to press those things stiff enough so that they have a good rigidity are really expensive and require a lot of other parts to operate correctly. Unless you have crazy strong clamps. But other than that you could totally make one in a basic workshop.

and on a side note, Rodney Mullen is the Steven Hawking of skateboarding.

when i was in school i made a deck not using clamps but using a vacuum bag, worked nicely, deck lasted an average length of time blah blah

The teacher said that the vacuum bag including pump cost a couple of hundred pounds which is well worth it to have your favourite shape everytime.